• Home
  • About
    • Hundred Percent Cotton Media Kit
  • Cotton 101 — Farm Basics
  • Policies & Privacy
  • Contact
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • Pinterest
    • Twitter
    • YouTube

Hundred Percent Cotton

  • Home
  • style
  • farm
  • at home

March 22, 2011

Cotton 101: Cotton Planting Considerations

This is one of the posts in the Cotton 101 series to introduce people to the basics of cotton farming. 

Cotton is a warm weather plant and doesn’t like wet feet at all.  That simple sentences guides a lot of planting thoughts for the crop. Like all crops, at planting you want to be sure you have the depth set correctly for the soil type, etc.

planting cotton in TexasRaised Beds for Planting — Depending on the soil types and typical moisture availability, some people will “bed up.” By creating raised beds a farmer can help channel water where they want it. My first cotton farm visit was to Mr. Ray Young’s in Wisner, La.  I was there in the winter and the fields were perfectly in rows for the stale seedbed planting to come. He helped pioneer this version of conservation tillage as the beds would help him keep the seed in moisture but not too wet.

A couple of years later I made my first visit to a farm in West Texas where they bedded up in order to plant between the raised beds. That way water could reach the seed in that truly dryland area. And in lots of places they plant to a level field. Different strokes for different folks or conditions.

Temperatures — A general guideline for planting from a temperature perspective is to wait for 65 degree soil temps at 8 am at a depth of 4-6 inches. You want to get that same temp for a few days and have favorable weather conditions (air temperature and sunlight), as well as consider the moisture, soil texture and ground cover.

One of the considerations that distinguishes cotton from some of the other major Southern crops like rice and soybeans is row spacing. Cotton is planted on rather wide rows (most farmers I know use 38-inch rows or something similar). With the humidity that plaques so many areas of the Cotton Belt, that wide spacing allows a bit more air to get through the crop and lessens the likelihood of late season issues with boll rot. Of course, this can give farmers a tough time as it takes longer for the crop to canopy and the increased spacing allows for more sunlight to get through encouraging weeds later into the season.

Consistency of row spacings is important since equipment rolls through the field for insect or weed control as well as harvest. And unlike a combine a cotton picker leaves the majority of the plant standing in the field so if the spacings aren’t consistent, you can really big problems at harvest.

Sharing is caring!

4 shares
  • Share
  • Tweet
  • LinkedIn
  • WhatsApp

Filed Under: cotton, farm, Food & Farm Tagged With: boll rot, Cotton 101, crop canopy, farm, plant, raised beds, row spacing, soil temperature, timeless

« Cotton 101: Things Farmers Think Through in Selecting Cotton Varieties
Cotton 101: What does a cotton plant or field look like? »

Trackbacks

  1. Cotton 101: What does a cotton plant or field look like? « ag – a colorful adventure says:
    March 31, 2011 at 8:32 am

    […] planters filled more quickly & efficiently to keep tractors moving. As I mentioned in a post on planting considerations, some farmers plant on beds  and others plant on flat ground. Similarly some use small planters […]

  2. Cotton 101: Saw My First Cotton Plants for the 2012 Season - a colorful adventure says:
    October 5, 2013 at 8:50 pm

    […] Planting Considerations […]

  3. Planting Cotton in California - a colorful adventure says:
    October 12, 2013 at 1:12 pm

    […] Cotton 101: Planting Considerations […]

  4. How Do Farmers Know When to Plant? | The Farmer's Life says:
    April 30, 2014 at 11:48 am

    […] But what about the South?  Read Cotton 101:  Planting Considerations […]

  5. C is for Cotton -- an A to Z Series about Agriculture says:
    April 25, 2015 at 7:24 pm

    […] Planting Considerations […]

  6. How many acres of cotton will U.S. farmers plant in 2018? | JP loves COTTON & more says:
    February 12, 2018 at 9:45 pm

    […] are for 2018. It is a topic that gets a lot of mindshare right now as farmers are buying seed and getting ready for planting across the […]

Don’t miss any new posts!

My Cotton Rec!

I’m fairly picky about fabrics — I want cotton that is quality that lasts. Keeps its shape. That’s why I’m sharing this link. I truly believe in the products.  I get a referral fee for you using the links.

For years now, I’ve bought myself dresses and leggings, that show my love of writing, science, etc. from Svaha. I’ve bought gifts too — seriously awesome socks for kids with awesome women on them!

Check out my new podcast in your fave app!

Recent Posts

  • Reducing the Stigma of Cotton for the Black Community
  • In Search of Really Soft T-Shirts
  • Embracing Vintage and Sustainability with Some Branding like J. Crew Always
  • We Will Long Miss Kenneth Hood
  • What is the Cotton Belt?

Want the basics?

cotton 101 blue

About the Site

From the seed to our shirts, cotton has a unique fit in our environment and lives. This site seeks to celebrate and inform about the natural fiber. Read more on the about page.

What else I am up to

JPlovesLIFE

Great Cotton Educational Video

Finding Great Cotton Dresses for Year-Round Wear

Reducing the Stigma of Cotton for the Black Community

soft t-shirts st louis

In Search of Really Soft T-Shirts

Embracing Vintage and Sustainability with Some Branding like J. Crew Always

This blog is part of the communications efforts by JPlovesCOTTON LLC.

Copyright © 2025 · Grounded Communications, LLC · Privacy Policy

4 shares